Evening Star Newspaper, January 10, 1893, Page 8

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WASHINGTON'’S BIG CESSPOOL. CORBETT AND GODDARD. Prompt Action Shéald Be Taken by Con-| “Gentleman Jim” Says That He Will Fight | Benjamin Tillett Charged With Inciting | Archbishop Ireland on the Current Catho- Report of the Committee Exonerating Him Tess to Abate the Nuisance. Only Champions. From the Faeineering Recor. Jim Corbett and Joe Goddard met in the The Washington Stan recently contained an | lobby of a hotel at Chicago last evening and in- Mustrated four-columa article upon the nai- duiged ine wordy war. A number of persons tance and menace to the health of the city | gathered around the pngiliste and alternate caused by the condition of Rock creek, ator-| thers and derisive comments by the crowd tuous stream situated between Washington and punctuated the remarks of the principals. The Georgetown, into which numerous sewers open | whole affair was caused by Goddard offering = and which, by reason of a dam atits mouth. bas | verbal challenge to Corbett. very little current below the points atwhich| Goddard, accompanied by Billy Madden, these sewers enter it It is, im fact,an open | called at the hotel, where they met Corbett, ac- cesspool over half a mile long, upon the bottom | compani-d by his brother. Goddard approached and sides of which deposits of sewage, sludge | Corbett. and mad are constantly taking place. “How do you do?” queried “Gentleman Jim,” It will be seen that this is a familiar story to in the politest way. PUREE toa| “I never felt better,” said Goddard, bringing = a Pique pa | bis large baad dows upon his menive chest by Repo way of emphasis. “I never felt in better trim,” to receive and diapers of foul water. end i | be added, and then the talk grew warm enough Se alate age pa | to ets the most eangwiaty man Presa : “1 want you to fight me,” said Goddard. Hong ago pointed cut the ovile and dangers of | «Great Seott!” exclaimed Corbett, measuring eres rece aes be sacuned apes being the | the other from his toes up to his head There cae ie of tiereep ting teaeee The de.| Fae thst in the look which produced a fit of ee a. ee for’ the | laughter among the “audience.” Goddard be- mand of the Washington Stax is for the | MOmter iy fas sth sane unk mouiee straightening 0: of the creck by the | “os eummection of Point “ihe archag|_ “Why,” continued Corbett, “should you offer png: So — a aee —. By ay | to fighi me? You must know that you are un- Sted teeke with ‘the removal of | Worthy of consideration until you have fought bee E no tthe mouth. ‘This is no doabt | 22d whipped two men—Jackson and Mitchell. desirable and tight be made a remunerative | 1m champion. and I shall not accept a chal- aa tee : th the | lenge from the representative of any nation ex- ns eat oo ae cept he be the declared, champion of that na- necessity for intercepting cae Fad — tion.” . Dank, becaase the natural bed of the stream | tion should not be used asa sewer, whether it be | |, \You.ere not champion, Any one couldhave tant i “I will not hear one word said against Sulli- fale tae nn Seale ple of nea | Y4Be"tetoried Corbet, with Erowing warath oe | “For years he held “the championship. He Sones on Bie cnntinnes fee mee of sens, | whipged all comers and retuieed the chaanpicn- leisure and scientific and literary parsaits, and | ThPped all comers and retained the champion it is certainly me that prompt action —— fc pine proved ile aquat So Site by Congrem te do qeey wae Oe ae | “Ten cain tu enpreent Americe—why ox Teena ag ite ad ene ee nage cescpost | Ot Yon fight me?” shouted Goddard, his voice oe a aed Ten notrmanent iehabittete, | growing bucky with passion. «ag trans he perpen he gps “I represent America, and for that very rea- Sol eatte of the country who. Visit the | #00 I should be a chump if I were to accept accl tae cutien every sees | your impudent challenge. Go and win your eres ‘Spurs as others have before you try to enierinto company with men of first rank. Iam now the JERSEY CENTRAL'S ACTION. defender of pugilixm in this country, and in —— |treating your offer as I do I am doing that ‘She Company Wants to Show les Freedom | which is in the best interests of my country, as From the Keading. far nx the prize ring is concerned. ‘A movement on the part of the officers of the| “What do you propose to do?” asked God- Central railroad of New Jersey, says the Phila- | ard. ‘I propose to fight Mitchell first, if he will delphia Times, made in Trenton yesterday to | ae pean on afc ia ‘Comes convince Chancellor McGill that not even a| Jackson, the champion of Australia. Then if remnant of an alliance existed between it-elf | you have anything to aay it will be your turn. and the Philadelphia and Reading railroad. led | You are only third man in my consideration. ; aaa tan | But now, I teil you what I will do, if you will tothe chreciation of 5 — = Pears make a match to fight Jackson I sball sign noon that the Reading combination bad gone | srticies om the des ther yeu tien roum to fubt te pieces. The story came from Trenton after | the winner. I shail put the money up to show, the exchanges bad closed, but it spread all | my good faith in the matter.” over town, aud the that Reading stock fell ++ offs point and « g the day made a CHARLEY MITCHELL COMING. good many well-informed people accept the | we Gets Out of Prison on Junvary 31 and Fumor as fact. The basis of the story and the ‘Saite only trath in it is the action of the Jersey Ceu-| Charley Mitchell's Intest declaration regard tral in petitioning Chancellor McGill for a0] ing Corbett comes from Bernard Abtahens a opportunity to prove that it is ~ nowise con. | fon’ ba: Vea: whan: bs Om totlacete’ tone eo cece or tan ane ee aes | with the boxer. In a letter to Jim Hall Mr. fm future to make it a subject for hostile legis- | Abrahams says: “He desired me to say to you lation. that he would be out of prison on Tuesday, President MeLeod of the Reading explained | January 31, and that he would surely sail for Caen ee aald oT ay nee Keoe fast | 2 states on Wednesday, February 8, So you tn je said: ot . day whos the Central wants to do, bat I suppose see he bas arranged his dates nice! they are tired of public clamor and suspicion | think that our American consins will consider and they are anxious to end the expensive liti- | that Mr. Corbett bas a walkover when they gation which further moves against them will | have a chance to see Mitchell. Idon't think he entail. The people in New Jersey and some | has looked so well axhe dees now in five vears. yple eleewhere will not believe that the road | He is sure to meet and conquer the American. operating withont seme alliance with the | Mark me down for that.” ng system, and it ix natural that the Cen- eae ee tral wants to change such adverse public opin- NO WAR ON LABOR. fon. I pointed out in my annual report today the exact status of the two roads, past and pres- | First Vice President McCrea of the Penneyl- ent. and the action of the Central is a sensible walla Iiiieaad Moutecthe Rasace eutcome of the Reading's endeator to prove ite | yy. toe7 enich was telegraphed from Cin- “What will be its effect on the so-called com- | cinnati to the effect that the Penusylvania com- dir ‘Absc @ the time | pany had inaugurated x movement against or- Chancellor McGill ma: mn the Cen- | fanized labor on its lines was said tobe without Sal matread bao been run os indeyendently of | foundation by officials oft vc the Missouri Pacific. It bas | . by * Hee etcemd by Roos ed ced tan ia tbe | delphia yesterday. It was stated in the dis interest of ite own stockholders. The Reading | that Oran Perry, a freight agent at Indianapo- fe not liable to it m any way. shape or manner. | lis, on Saturday summoned the freight handlers ere ot Gn Renting eked ould not | before him, saluting them with the remark, affected by any of its actions und the com- | .. dood 7 Dine is just as much of m combine as exer, ex-| Ai! of you bo “s mieos oe ne re bom @ept that the Jersey Central is not in it.” pany instead of the union will walk to this side ‘A question about the Central's control of coal | of the room.” Fifteen men stepped to the side eatpat brought out this reply: gen coal as it of the room and the five who remained station- controls is subject to mining and marketing as hanged. feces At. ‘The Reading will carry it oF the | “Eire Vico Precident James McCrea of the Pennesivenia will carry it. according to the | ; a2 Phe : Pennsy!vania company’s lines, which means ail Central's own idea of profit. Ihave no know!- | j000 vest of Picehore, cut edge of the road's action today, and I have no Re Bai Feet thtel As meee bea gee Sooke’ HBO" | the newspapers. Lean, however, ataie that the —— question of dispensing with organized labor on Sie semtn of Srackient MaLoeti on thecal | 5. i65 of sur ronds hus never bean broached, qnestion are pertinent in view of a dispatch re : wot = Geived from Fas on late last night saving that fy farihe:more, it is in no was the policy of the Central bereesfter would deliver every day | {B@comiany to make, ans c! ee Ly in railroad eight traine of | taik.as 1 do not knowany of the circumstancen, Leese Wiley eee Conte rable: wast eue ‘he | Lsuppose be has had troable with bis men ani eval to Philadelphia vin the Beli ware division of the Penusvivania Be formation of t verted at Bethichem ing carried it pa _ ss to Philadelphia over its own lands. The Pennsyl-| GLADSTONE'S DE vania suffered a good deal of in owing to the change, and the‘ gone back to the old order of things. WEY THE CENTRAL WITHDREW. The New York Herald this morning said the Backbone of the Reading coal combine has beet Broken by the withdrawal of the Jersey Central, and gives the following as the reason for the latter road s actic his action and remarks, ‘T PREDICTED. >nvenience Mes. Maybrick's Case. Mr. T. W. Russell, liberal-unionist member of parliament for South e, who is in Boston, «ays among other things that he bad read Gail Hamilton's letter to Mr. Gladstone in relation to the imprisonment of Mrs. May- brick. war that! Mr. Aequith, he said, and not Mr. Gladstone, Central | is the responsible party in the matter. | He was essaul quite certain that Mr. Asquith is not in the ‘on Le | least influenced by anything like American iz was 6,000,000 fc to sell woe | tFVention as aileged by Gail Hamilton, and he ily the Central | was also quite sure that the home secretary will emounting to do ali that is right and just in Mrs. Maybrick’s than 5,500,000 tons tthe profit on 500,000 Cree we i ._, \ease. The British parliament, be said, bas ub- cay poe agp ogy The Lehigh sointely nothing to do with the matter. = rents « aware. Tu regard to parliamentary maiters Mr. + because Fussell gave it as Lis opinion that there will be & dissolution of parliament next year, because Gladstone cannot possibly goon ‘with his present majority. dis home commons or in th by McLeod 1, but the earn- will be defeated ei: lords on er in the count of the eam the Jerser fact that he has not the required strength with — which to carry it through. Certaim defeat now stares the liberal party and iis home rule measure *quarely in the face. It will be abso- jutely ible for Mr. Gladstone to carry his bill while there is a large majority in Ro aati ‘aut he 1 oppored to it.” pec gar Upon the question of immigration Mr. Rus- Continuing the Herald sell said: “*We certainly cannot spare any more well vertiies the abc inne We eee ee wae tince een ae a deena. tr m the eye aad, ~becanse nd. I think the emigrating portion a nn ee tion can do better in Canada than it nthe will say a word if the United * does stop immigra- tion. England will certainly raise no com- fou will be free to make your own rates will enable us Te 18 no reason weell then said thet Lord Randolph iM would be one of the most formidabie opponents of the government and its home rule ‘ollege Alamnt. | scheme at the next session of Parliament. At the regular annual meeting of the Alumni —+e+- Bociety of St. Joba's College. held in the col- Inauguration in Kansas, lege, the following officers ‘The triumph of the populisis of Kaneas made year were elected: President, Mr. Jus. F. Shea, | possible at the firet vice president, Mr. W.H. Manogue: second | 4 few minutes after noo: Viee president, Mr. J. A. Madigan; secretary, | state government was formally Mr. J. J. Dol . Bs ean. The following compare the exe atv Benson, Mr. I. J. Se Mr. J.D. Sullivan and The meeting was enthusins ic in ite arrenge-| pail was com surrendered by ommittee: Dr. J. H. P. sentat assembled, the procession tried to make for the high street, but were barred by the police, who | CHEERS GRE at length bad to charge the demonstrators, cad in olen cicmenee tha procession was| He Arrives at Slegmaringen to Attend To- broken up. Portions of the procession found their way to the horse fair, where an open-air] The little south German town of Siegmarin- meeting was held. had to use their staves freel > 8 crowd, some of whom must have been badly | the marringe today of Ferdinand, crown burt. "The pec ral jr betadiens:! who quickly cleared the streets | daughter of the Duke of Edinburgh and grand- n't | they were engaged dispersing crowds whic Ingered in the city strongly worded resolution was passed asse ing that the men were allowed to starve to gratify unscrupulous employer 7 ‘ Speekers condemned the magistrates for calling | “&dding. and he arrived ee out the troops and derided their efforts. After | Yesterday morning King Charles of Rou- several exciting scenes, during which two | mania, uncle of the bridegroom, accompanied dragoon guards were slightly wounded with | by his staff and the members of the ministry, Stones, and four or five casualties, resulting | arrived from Bucharest. chiefly from the charges, had been treated at | with ice, giving an idea of the intensely cold the infirmary, the military succeeded in clear- | weather prevailing. ing the horse fair. Tillett is accused of having urged ihe laboring men not to obey the restric- | awaiting hia coming and he was givon a hearty tons pnt by the authorities upon the de-|weleome. He was at once driven to the monstration. Schloss, his brother's residence. Populists in the legislature have received | Emyeror Willintn instructions from the leaders of the party, | for the palace. The entire route was lined with presumably from Washington, not to vote | veteran soldiers from the whole district, wear- for « democrat for United States Senator | ing upon their breasts the medals they had won, under any circumstances. It 1s also stated . a that the \populists in Wyoming and Cali- fornia have received the same instructions, with the view of preventing the democrats of secur- ing absolute majority in the senat - Ing out the populists hope to get into a position | _The board of directors of the Society of the to for radical legislation on silver, he first I knew | of such action being taken was what I saw in | are intendin, F ; Come frou the cast, but the thi d, Beecher, haa | &F€8* in Philadelphia. Members wore present made no promises, and because he ix in a | from Washington, New York, Boston, Baltimore position to elect a democrat a great deal of | and Westfield, N. J. The charter which had <i has sitaply | 4 Eiberal Unionist Member on Home Rule—| worry is felt ae to his attitude. He walked Py out of the bouse with the dems. last Tuesday, and bes more than once said that he would | vote for a democrat for senator. | kirchen, Germany. small hotels whic alleyway in which the bomb was placed were | ranging from the ages of eighty-seven to 104 | shaken so that the windows broke and plaster | Y¢8r, still alive and members of the society. inthian Club, York street, Pall Mall, and ar- | Social pleasure. rested the secretary and two officials. The raid was made under the law against disorderly] Capt. C. A. J. Farrar, well known to tourists houses. until $ or 4 o'clock every morning. |by Emperor of Norfolk out of Los Angel Baldwin's famous race mare, The colt was| Petitions are circulating all over the state of | racing. lis in November was fulfilled | yesterday, when the | ‘her Fabri- | the vanquished to the victors. The ceremony | tlemen were chosen to took place in the bail of the house of repre- at Topek: d ni 3 De JF. Mtoran, | Probably the greatent crowd that has ever wc. | AbOUt 1 o'clock in the afternoon the aleeper| The steamer New Mary Houston was cut ir. W. H. DeLacy. sembled in Kansas ona similar occasion. ‘The | Opened both eyes so that the pupils were ments for the annval dinner, which will take i Weicker «Hotel on the evening of the | Tuesday of the present month. | oe ‘The Round Tab ‘The Round Table Ciub beld its regulardinner at the Sboreham on Saturday evening. After the formal dinner the following towts were Tesponded to inan able manner: “The Legal Profession,” by Mr. Alexander R. Mullowney, and “Modern Politics,” by Mr. Walter T.| Wright. A paper on “Woman and the Electric | Franchise” was presented for discussion by | Mr. Percival M. wn. As @ result of this @iseussion the club decided to open its portals end entertain its lady friends in the near fatore. Among thove present and participating Clarence | ‘The woods will wait until spring before turn- fag over any new leaves. ‘ably filled as early a* 11 o'cloc, Visible and then slowly closed them again. Slight THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. C, A LABOR LEADER ON TRIAL. Strikersto Biot. = He Sensation. for parliament at West Bradford in the gen-| Post yesterday said: eral election, was put on trial at Bristol, Eng.,| “It is not proper for mein my present man- yesterday on a => of having incited the} ner of viewing things to talk publicly of the Strikers to riot on the occasion of the labor | ‘conspiracy’ against Mgr. Satolli and myself | demonstration at Bristol on the Friday aut tonne cade imber of leading | Which the wonderful enterprise of the Chicago labor mea wos poamegt oi; the Wl snd Tillett | Sunday Post bas unveiled. Iam not the sole was heartily cheered by a large crowd on his | one attacked; the arrows winged toward me are way to the court room. bidden to seek higher victims, some of whom ‘THE BRISTOL LABOR TROUBLES. even are other than Mgr. Satolli, These cancare The labor troubles in Bristol were caused | for themselves and need no word of help from by the timber merchants locking out| St. Paul. their deal porters, who have for over a Ireland. however, as an Ameri- twenty years worked on a system of day | can. asks the editors of American newspapers work. Wee eoanan af tho fear being te| Sesthae bo worthy of Gale cone of Younes the employers’ favor, the men were locked out | and fair play to lend their columns to anony- without any notice being given on account of | mous ters seeking to besmirch men whom their refusal to allow a vessel to be disc! Position and duty invest with solemn respon by local men. The name of this vessel was the | sibilities before their own consciences and the Revolving Light. She was moored in the roads | Ptople of the whole country. until all the other vessels were discharged. She ff,” continued the prelate, “Archbishop was then brought up the river and Ireland and Archbishop Satolli, or others by a gang of men from another port. On this | higher than they, whoever they be, have sinned account Bristol men refused to assist in the | and deserve that war be declared against them, work. they have from their character and their office After negotiations, the firm promised that | the right a: the hands of an American public to the matter should not occur again, and every- uch consideration: ‘That no cowards, thing appeared to be settled. afraid to uplift their banners and herald alou On the men returning to work,however, they | their names, skulking ignobly behind the were refused employment except on the condi- | darkened curtains of editorial sanctums, be al- thon of their accep*ing it under a contract sye- | lowed to send toward them through the air tem, the men having no power of choosing the | Poisoning missiles. gangs or the contractor, and being obliged to| | ‘“Speaking for myself and my associates in pay the latter out of their earnings. tack, I protest aguinst honorable news- This the men could not accept, and they were | papers admitting into their columns anony- locked out. The men expressed themselves as | Mous articles, the manifest intent of which is being willing to accept any system of contract|to injure and misrepresent. For my own work such as prevailed in Hull and London. | §) part I declare that Ihave no dread of ‘The men prepared and submitted » scheme | tl na, provided it be open to the public which, after considerable trouble, they induced | eye. But I will not at any time lower my lance the employers and the Bristol conciliatory board | to strive against opponents who lie away ob- to conrider. scured in corners and subterranean holes, nor This body reported favorably upon it after | will I permit my allies who do not equally with taking evidence from practical men as to its | me love the noonday light.” fairness to both parties. The men claimed that| A special to the New York Sun from St. Paul the rates at which they offered todo the work | ays: Archbishop Ireland has not sent charges were below those of any other port, considering | against Archbishop Corrigan to Rome, but that the distance timber had to bo carried. At| he will eventually be heard from in that direc- present the men are paid 5 shillings per day, | tion there is no doubt. The announcement carrying what is equivalent to two and a half | from Chicago that he had already done hundredweight of timber # dintance of from | ated a great sensation in Catholic circles here, twelve to fifteen miles. but not a ripple in the household of the arch- ‘The employers refused to accept the recom- | bishop, for when informed of the fact his man- mendations ef the conciliation board or to| ner was evidence that the report of his alleged allow men any opportunity of choosing the | action did not surprise him. He listened calmly gangs, effective capatvtanivans of the job or | while the details of the Chicago article were access to the buildings. ‘Ihe men applied for | given to him and then quietly said: le for alabor procession. ‘This leave was| ‘‘I have sent no charges to Rome. given anda route designated. the Bristol au-| This is all that he would say on the subject, thorities at the came time introducing several | xcept that he added that there would be no ne- hundred dragoons and hussars from Aldershot | Cessity to xend charges to the pope while his nc- on the ground that a breach of the peace was| credited delegate, Mgr. Satolli, was in this apprebended. The labor people objected to| country. The archbishop distinctly said he bei debarred from the leading streets on | had made no charges against Archbixhop Cor- their line of route. The prohibited line of | rigan, but his words and manner left the im- route was strongly guarded by the police and | Pression that the affair wonld at the proper basware, time be brought to the attention of the papal At ‘tol bridge, where manv thoueands were | ablegate. ———_~-e+-_—_____ THE KAISER. day's Wedding. wa : gen is filled with royal personages from 1 toe thle eee ey ie natal bridge | ait over Europe, who assembled to wituees le soon fled, however, before | Prince of Roumania, and Princess Marie, eldest daughter of Queen Victoria, As the head of both branches of the Hohen- At the labor meeting a|zollern family, Emperor William, who, it will be remembered, is also a grandson of Queen Victoria, considered it his duty to attend the At half-past 9 o'clock military ucts : at and the His train was covered All the royal personages in the town were ithe prosecution charged that Tillett, in| Shortly afterward the saloon train in which addressing the Bristol etrikers, urged them to Emperor William traveled from Berlin arrived. fight with fists and clubs, and if necessary with |'A large crowd of royal personages, military of- gans, and declared that he would lead them, ficers and town dignitaries awaited him at the ‘The case was adjourned until January 18. railway station and his reception was a most | ———_-e+_____ enthusiastic one. A military band played the PLANS OF POPULISTS. national anthem as he alighted from the train. ———— The bells of the churches pened forth a wel- They Hope to Force the Democrats in Con- | come to his majesty, while the crowd of townn- | gress to Vote for Free Silver. Frege shouted themselves hoarse with “Hochs! | Isabel of Spain we find that in Latin she is ochs!” When the reception at the station was over ntered a carriage and started Within the past twenty-four hours the threo SOCIETY OF THE WAR OF 1812, A Celebration In the Old United States Sen- ate Chomber in Philadelphia. By hoid- « the democrats into promising some | War of 1812 celebrated the seventy-eighth an- niversary of the battle of New Orleans in the Iti known that two of the Montana populists | senate chamber of the old United States Con. 0 obey the request which has been granted by common pleas, No. 2, was ex- hibited, and a frame is to be made for it from wood of the old frigate Constitution, known by ‘The republicans are hard at work trying to | the sobriquet of Old Ironsides prior to the con- get him to promise to be neutral at least for the | struction of the ironclads, as the Navy Depart- firet few ballots, but he keeps his own counsel. | ment had kindly forwarded sufficient for that << A Fortunate Freape. eo i ‘The committee on constitution and b; A dynamite bomb was exploded in Gelsen-| reported their work completed, and they were Yesterday afternoon. Two | ordered to proceed and print. ‘The secretary stand on each side of the | reported fifty-five survivors of the war of 1812, Col. E. Burd Gardener of NewYork addressed fell from the walls, Although several persons | «he board on the principles and forme of or- | were passing in the street hurdly twenty yards | ganizing patriotic and military societies. This away nobody was injured. The man who placed | was followed by a discussion particips | the bomb is supposed to be an anarchist emis- | Col. John Biddle Porter, Rear Admiral F. A. | sary from the Saar district, who bas gone tothe | Roe, Capt. Henry H. Bellac, Appleton Morgan, m pose of fomenting a strike there in sympathy | committee was appointed toformul fed in by ig region around Gelsenkirch for the pur-| Charles H. Murr and A. Jackson Reilly. A ‘aplan for with the movement in Saar. forming branch societies in other states. hepa Op serene A. Nelson Lewis had a collation ordered at A London Weat End Club Raided. Boldt’s restaurant, which the members pro- The London police raided last night the Cor-| ceeded to dispatch, and spent two hours in o—_—____ An Old Maine Guide Dead. lub was the resort of men and} and hunters in the Rangeley lake region in ho danced and caroused there | Yuine as a guide, has died, aged fifty-five. oe eee Capt. Farrar was born in Maine and spent A Highty Bred Colt. much of his life in the woods and on the lakes The first thoroughbred foal of the year ie re-|Of that state. Ho was tho suthor of many orted from E. J. Baldwin's Santa Anita ranch | *tories for boys, depicting scenes and ad. California. It is a strapping chestnut colt mecmubinae aE oa ste Atmed at the Faribault Plan. fast women, born January 5, which is unusually early even 4 Maine and receiving many signatures praying for Californin, and the colt will have a big ad- | the legislature that the following amendment vantage over eastern yearlings when he begins | 4, the constitution of Maine be submitted to the voters at the election in September, 1894: Brought Back From the Grave. “No money or property of the state, and no Clay G. Hopper of Toledo, the young man who | money raised by taxation by any town or city {this state, shall ever be appropriated or Was supposed to have died ten days ago, is cer- | ° i: t tainly alive. The first positive sign of life was the | Used: oF authorized to. be used: for the purpose ight eye slightly opened and then closed. | priation, payment for services, expenses or ‘The body was then bathed in brandy and Petar any pena eo —— wrapped in flannel and is regaining its natudil | OF religious society or un: which is wacmth. | Last evening it wae, much warmer er ee ee ee ee than it was in the morning. ips seem. PEIINER S dry and feverish and are moistened repeatedly. Sunk by Floating Ice. ———__ + «+-___ | Elizabeth. A book of Latin verses in her type of the fa of founding, maintaining or aiding by appro- | TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1893—-TEN PAGES. REV. DR. BRIGGS’ CASE. | THE POWER OF FASCINATION. Beyond the Range of Reason to Determine Adopted by the New York Pr-sbytery. in What It Consists. ‘The final meeting of the presbytery of New | From the Queen. York. sitting as a court on thetrial of the! What is it? Whence does it spring? Inwhat charges against the Rev. Dr. Charles A. Briggs, | unexplored region of the mind or body are its | met at 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon to receive | roots to be found? We understand it asa the report of the special committee having in ing fact, but of its why, ite wherefore, and charge the consideration of the vote taken at whether it bean afinity purely spiritual or | the last meeting of the judiciary. partly physical, we know absolutely nothing. For more than an hour the report was dis- | Yet it exists; and most of us have succumbed cussed and a motion to lay that section relating | to its power. Few indeed areso poor in im- to the explanations of Dr. Briggs on the table | agination, eo azid in sympathies, as not to have was lost by a vote of 58 to 47. become fascinated by some one or something at Dr. Briggs and Col. McCook and others who | one time of life. And naturally youth is the had been excluded from the executive session | time most fertile in these extraordinary out- were admitted to the room at 5 o'clock. Mod- | burtts of self-surrender, when that one special erator Bliss then read the report of the commit- | person is the center of the universe for tee, which he said had been adopted by the | the fascinated soul, the absolute point of court by a majority report. fection, and the flawless being who can do no Gv du consideration tothe deesdnat'e| "RE ion to the defendant's explanations of the Innguage used in his in: | dition of raranes, hed thie aire ge nee et augural address, accepting his frank and full | fasci mn in things more than in persons. To disclaimer of the interpretation which has been | them matter has attributes which ere lost when | put upon some of the are and illustrations, | reason takes the place of imagination. A child and-bis affirmations of lovaity to the standards ‘ | of the church and to the hol¥ Scriptures as the | Till not be parted from it. It does not signify only infallible rule of faith and practice, the | what the thing ia. It inay bea doll ors fuy | — tery does notfi dthathehastransgressed rabbit, a ball or a bit of blanket. All who have | the limite of liberty allowed under the consti- | to do with children know that this queer attrac- tution to scholarship ees approval of | Hon, czist# in lifeless, formlese things as well sa ‘Therefore, in those to which it would be more easy to give the critical or thoological views embodied in | that occult grace. One sturdy little feltaw, ‘the inaugural addross or the manner in which | who once caught # small silver fish, would not they have been expressed and illustrated, the | let the slippery creature out of hix chubby hand resbytery pronounces tho Rev. Charles A. | tili sleep relaxed his grasp. And then, in the riggn, D. D., fully acquitted of the offenses morning, when he found t his scaly charm = against: him, the several charges and | had gone, heaven and earth came together specifications nccepted for probation having |and he broke his little heart in howls. What | been not sustained.” aid i 1 that dead, sli trot harm Discussion followed as to whether or not the | represent to lita? Semnethine gone ne coer bi be} caren sepert should not have been by —— of Teason to determine. It must have ° led his callow soul with some strange sug- the actos ot te sed stformat ception te | gestion of exquinitebraitr.“aome subtle weuee a -off divinity, for moment incor- Ae ee ree | civlttsation gos back Yor tit ode te honste sol - | civilization goes back for its gods sth ani utes, as the prosecution had not been furnished | birds and fi-hes, so children find their friends pte an ofticial copy of these notes. He said he | and secret coafidants, their loves and mental jould appeal the case to the general assembly. | marvels, in their hairy plavmates or their —_—o feathered captives, We are never so near to the SMITH WILL BE ELECTED. lower creatures as when we are children. We never understand them so well nor love them jew Jersey Legislature to Choose a| so much, for the tie of community and affec- ‘naan heiis acuatca fiom between a child anda dog. or a child and , is stronger than any made bet an The one hundred and seventeenth session of | adult’ master and a four-footed follower, or the New Jersey legislature will convene this becapped old mistress and a furry favorite—one afternoon at Trenton. The inauguration of a| of the “little lions, small, and dainty «weet, mew governor and the slection of = United | for which Arsince dung over her old lover end States Senator will add especial interest to the | vk ““far-traveled Niciaa” instead. What is it that session. The election of James Smith, jr. | repels us in another The P* Weight say the plain United States Senator is foreshadowed by the | impress of the spirit within if we were all at- action of the democratic caucus held at the | tracted by the «ame person and all repelled by Trenton House last night. thesime. But, as with that homely old adage : z which sets forth how “one man’s ment is an- Robert 8. Adrian of Middlesex was chosen | other man’s poison,” 60 the face—the person— for president of the senate. He was backed by | whom we loathe another passionately desites, against Abbett for United States Senate. The | ately lonthes pag gps so s art ts beginnings in secret #ource— a aed following other senate officers: | some strange, undetected science of which we me: +, Samuel C. Thompson of Warren; | have not got the key. These subtle harmonies pa ve eae pag Pool eee and no less subtle discords have their own “Un- Sergeant-at-nrms, Michael Mason of Hudson; | | assixtant eergeant-at-arms, John W. Lancaster | of Hunterdon and Edward B. Vancouver of Burlington; engrossing clerk, John P. Flynn of lem; assistant engrossing clerk, John Mona- Wi “ | han of Bergen; clerk, Henry J. Earle of Pas- neti ; how much nearer to Hoy Reciri foes saic; calendar ‘clerk, G. S. Robinson of Cape | of this Larmony—ihie discord—are we? We Mav; asistant journal, John H. Matthison of | have given a name, but the name wante ite ogg came forested tore’ the | definition, Sa a mypeerrs . : duced to its elements. For, after all, what is bey and it passed off without excitement. this “magnetism” which we say we see because Gloucester race track, will be cho-en speaker. Tetons soos eas "hedeale sodged Fo certain is he of his success that he is already | prove an indefinite amount of chemical afiinity forming the standing committees. orastrangely complex geometrical arrauge- Direc ince tenet ereERCA ment of atoms? ELIZABETH AND ISABELLA, i* power of fascination plays an important ———_—— part in the lives of men and women. Too often Authorities to Show That the Two Names | the effects are disastrous, though at times—as ‘Bre Ges and tisSame. fn the lenders of larre and righteous more- : ments or of purer spiritual aspirations—it has A correspondent of the London Spectator | pun's,or OF urer st : | Points ont that Isabella and Elizabeth are the | world. Yet for one man who is elevated and same. He says that this fact may be found in| made heroic by the personal fascination of a the mysteries of psvcho-physiology before we come upon that well-conceaied original cause. lagnetic.” some call it, which is merely rest- | Prescott’s history of Ferdinand and Isabella, Woman, sav, thonsends are degraded and | | Speaking (vol. 3, p. 199) of Queen Isabella he cemeeceraan Mint Oreoanl tek the Cueaanee alludes to her illustrious namosake, Elizabeth shoe ore = ngth of heroes t name of the Catholic queen, is correctly reu- | mold to strengthen dered into English by that of Elizabeth. ion, to whic “ ime or another yield ourselves, has its Tr we look to documents of the age of | {2rinio aide as well as its lovely. "The “demon lover’ of tne old poem was but another true are the woman of beroi Praise was published in the Netherlands in strong mind over « | 1497, ‘Ad divam Heliabet * * * reginam 8nd the bod: ‘ruin of the one who sields, For, ae indeed, what is love but fa-cination in its hign: cig pare i ami bed. ia catwence and to the fpremet degree? fit : : : ere not so how should nds . Italian in an account of her funerul, in 1645, a8 | Whieall the fervor of elite” We neon ical senate ess sas ies men be meggemind into degradation by an utteriy Bapt. mater, Ehsabetta Andr. Regis Hung. {:nows no more of love than che does of vir ue filin. Isabella regina Portuguiiae Isabella. Lud. | Yet che has power to attract, keep and ruin =. ibicd ths meneere: | strong men and noble lives We see, ‘on the ied per hand, women of characte position, game to be changed in Spanish into Isabel is @ | who love, themelven bods azd souls for boxe distinct question,” the correspondent goes on a to say, “‘on whieh I will only venture to sugcest | ently, to recommend him. Hateful to one, he that the Spaniards at an early age (Yeabel is | j. facinating to another, and the m: found in print as early as 1443) must have sup- | remains unsolved and insoluble. A wife clings Reeraed te ovine erin ie piiooneg cial ae dranken, dissijated hasband, not from a curious law of pronunciation, of which many | lore the deg ra weak, tothe soul's perdition ot), thus ‘Madrid’ is sometimes written “Mad- | beyond. self-cenpect. a ghanband adores a , womun who has nota charm, physical or moral, To the foregoing, the editor of the Spectator that an outsider enn discpver—and. vo oh | Femarke: . | through the scale of human emotions’ We | “May we suggest totally different origin for | have this power as a clue to many strange | the name? Is not ‘Isabella’ simply a bad #pell- | stories in hixtory, which, however, does not ad- | ing for ‘Aissa bella,’ ‘pretty Avesha?’ ‘Ayesha,’ | vance us much. But the only practical part thousands of Moorish women in Spain.” ought to take as to the character and nature of ——r those to whom we open our own house door, Senator Cartiste’s Decision, for where there are young ople there wiil Senator John G. Carlisle arrived at Frankfort, Reidy ee oe Faull bapcpes By rbompaiyrease can Ky., Sunday night from Washington to argue | Work, to the harvest of good grain or tares, as the Frankfort lottery case. Mr. Carlisle said to | MY be determined by bis own nature, many callers that he had not made up his mind IN JIM-JAM VALLEY. about going into the cabinet. However, it is| ~ said he told one of his intimate friends that he | The Strange Sights Seen There Justify Its had decided to resign and accept the offer of Curious Name. Mr. Cleteland to be Secretary of the Treasury. | rom the St. Louis Republie. It is thought Mr. Carlisle will send in his resig-| “In the JimJam valley in California there nation to Gov. Brown by February 4, are many wonderful and remarkable mirages,”’ said John E. Owens of New York, now stopping The New Haren Minister’ hese ait ita |8t the Lindell. “It is named Jim-Jam valley : x at if8 | because of the curious and strange sights seen meeting yesterday morning discussed the letter saas us eas 4 tly addressed to tho Yale faculty asking ‘Hete. The valley is about forty miles long ani — y & | thirty miles wide. Nota soul lives within its that some steps be taken to discipline the. student population and if possible keep within | territory... Mountains capped with snow ee Donde the drink and gambling evils, which | *°™ surround the valley. Im itthe eye sees lakes, seemed to the clergymen to be serious ones. | Sree" trees, bubbling springs and even lilies ‘The clergymen were of the opinion that if the 8toWing in the marshes. Contrast these with the faculty would take the step proposed it would | rugged mountains that surround you, and the be productive of great good among the col-, picture ia one of indescribable lovleiness and legians. It is pretty certain that the faculty has | beauty. You imagine that no patadiee, ethereal | replied to the letter, but neither document can | or heavenly, could surpass it, In the distance | be obtained for publication. ‘The association | there are beautiful lakes, with lovers paddlii | is undenominational. softly over the calm waters; fantastic craft SSeS benatifal water nymphs’ show themselves Weird and somber figures gleam at you from Seeins ene Teseae Mare Pall. all directions and dim!y outhned forms of all John Ward has retired permanently from | Colors, shapes and sizes may be seen, base ball. He called at the New York Herald|" +Oceasionally there's a storm in the valley. | office Inst night and said: “Ihave decided to Forked lightning leaps from the mountain tops retife permanently from base ball and will in | aud in ite light vou see strange animals, differ- ent from any you have ever heard about before. the faturé take up the legul profession: I want | ““ithtne mirages strike the observer with aeo | to makea start now and feel that I can stop ‘men. care to repea | playing ball for s living. Ido not leave the | Ana fem, men who see them once care to repeat ivn club because of any misunderstand- ing with Mr. Byrne, but simply because I want fo quit, J bare told Mr. Abell what I'am going | prom the Puiluleiph' Pr o do, and you know ve not a The haman family living on earth today con- him. ' should like to play ball in New York , : again, but it is too late How.” Ward's retire, | fists of about 1.450,000,000 souls, not less, prob- AUCTION SALES. _ AUCTION SALES. _ THIS EVENING. WORTH OF DIAMONDS, GOLD Sathes, fine ellver w Marstou'y toon ofice, Troy ‘oetioneer, Ul Pa. ave., wher Metro? | FPEALIE prrannweny. oascqn i te e in rel Horse tahon wp ina and cor fier en 2 fr noveth on, Be ore | Dealth officer. SAMUEL BINS. £)N, Pound) | LATIMER & SLOAN, Aum Tis07 Got | WALTER B. WiLL RUSEWOOD CASE PIANO. WA! NUT FY UPHOLSTERED. GILT FRAME wir INGS, SIDE BOAR} AMS & CO., Auctioneers tion of hourek-e: ing arric ere and private bu ers ts a. WALTER B WILLIAMS Pomp | THOMAS E. WAGGAMAN. Real Estate Auctioneer. FS SALE OF VArvaBLe ‘AL FSTATE ON TWELFTH s THF CITY OF WASHING’ of trust bearing date of the D. IBM, and recorded in Libe. “a, one of the land records of bie, amd at the requ secured thereby, falls in love with a bit of dead material and | ihe, AT TATE-PAS all that’ real estate sitmat Gy of “ashington, District of Colum ta, and bein ot numbered fret y elem th ther-of, and also ot numbered forty: bine. fifty. fifty-one and fifty-two, in square cording to the subsitvision of said aguare br € of St. John's parieh made by And treasurer, recoried in th. aurvercr's office of the District of Columbia, tom wethe” with the tu, rovementa thereon, sale Oue-third exch and the balance in one Years, for which tive hrm the purchaser with Interest at} por annum from the day of al options of the pure $500 will be reguired seventy (70) fect, th thence sen b_ seventy AND THE (1). two (2) and three tenors If terns of sale be not | complied with tn fteen dave from day of sae the tees Feser've the rietit to rea! Sheree defalting pare x ertiseinent of such resale in some newspaper ia toe seid city of Watioee ‘i 4 T E WAGGAM. fO-THE ABOVE SALE 18 POSTPONED ON A: men: ¥ of the went! EENH DAY OF 3A ame hour and lace. HARRISON 8. BARBOUR, ? WILLIAM J MILLE! NITED STATES MAW of s writ of fleri fa office of the Supreme Court of the Disiric me directed, T will sell at pull Fooms of Ratelift count of the snc: Rbove sales are} NINTH DAY UP'SA plac acts us in one face and | Caninets, one (1) Tab’. seized and ‘evied w Mirkiewtex, and wi 0. 28. "GH, in favor of Emarn bed went ¥ w vc | a ea- . ATIMER & SLOAN, Aucttonee the Rose-Smith-Pideock combine, which is | and that which wo desire another as passion: | j@@;T#is SALE HAS BEEN Pos 1 mabaamasizshepapgind ——acagnin dmagicboee The cause lies deeper than this, | piace and hou. 7 ROLLS OF WALL PAPER NUARY TWELFTH, at HALF- PAST TFN O'CLOCK A.M., we sball sell within ov 70th and Pennsyivanta * sprung,” and we have to go further yet into! On THTRSDAY, 3A: sales ron, corner other grades of Wall Paper nu "1 able for halls, Mbrary. din ng roc ith ‘borderimg and cei atterns recentiy pur. lors and bed 90m 8 ylish and destrable convenience of ae. | EkS SHULD GIVE A WALTER B_ WILLIAMS & O0.. Aucts N BROS., Auctionsers. EXECUTOR'S SALF. OF FRAME DWELLING AND HOUSE No. 324 F STReET sOUIH- | centum per annum | sevst aonualls, = J known as and Meine par-of “24, fe hundred Beginning for the sameat ee five (5) incliew fr. said lot oa Fs reet south i runn me thenre the Line of Fetrect fourteen (14) feet, ten siaty-eight (ik) feet to an alle of salvation for the | fet bt) tent wid ny line of said alley fourteen (14) feet, thence north sixty-eight (GS) feet to the place of be> yer with all the improvements, ware. ease- . rights. privilaces, apyurter di aments to the same belinging or in any Wise a per and Delilahs are more potent to reduce the | | of England, and appends the note, Isabel, the | st: pavable semi-anntaily, and to be sec nd ennoble cowards. This | payable semi-anncaiis we all, more or lew, at | 290 required at chaser after five days’ advertisment tale in some news apo D.C. TIMOTHY 3. GOR Executor of last will and testament of tal power which ean be used by a| abitshed in. Wahine ‘[HOMAS DOWLING & SON, AUCTIONEERS CERY, SALT 0. hint ants and Lee B, Mosher ts detenaut front af the pre © CLOCK P.M fwenty-eieht (728): beet worthless vuigarinn who bas nothing, appar-| pa norticonn hina The md onmevat? (gt inches fecteeven ii) inches snd ‘7 arod’ ani’ twenty- (S34) nohesto the three-tory a y why | {! which is heroic. but from ebject | ee : ike love of one hopelessly sub- | mptes may be found, put ‘I’ in the place of ued and fascinated to the point which lies | e Weck ser to be x to besecnred vy deed of tru ton pronerty #0) | TRUSTE RS. Sate OF VALCARLE Iver: . ‘cont wilh wthin ten days fee regerven the right to rese fanitin: parchaser, after hy days’ fter day of wale the trae properly ‘Aisa,’ must_have been the name of | which touches our daily life is the care we | ITED STATES MARSHAL’S SALE. Jerk estice at the Supreme Court of tre Distt uflice af. te Supreme Coart of the District Sciam: wd to'me directed I will sell. sal fo oxsh, at the amction room Goninany” No. 30 Benmasiv ante D strict of Co w {arias insuel ont of the . | followin describe Tere | being TEN (10) O'CLOCK AM... right and interest of the defendant if' and’ to the following "asen Tomatoes, seven (7) casos Corn, ) gross Dixon Yeast Powder, ford Yeast Powder. four (4) finewar, four (4) barrel Buakets, twanty (.0) barrels wheat, Picke's, Matebes, Burners, ab wt 200) uce Catsup. 1 er. 10" Senet leused as Starch, one (1) bar. ~pices. Cakes, ‘Tobacco, S's: lott Granta 4 ised Milk. three (3) boxes Sebactonse Seized and levied upon as the rroperty of Yancy D. Pete and wil he auld, to aati greet 1908. STEEL M, RAN DELL, U. 8 Marsh RATCLIFFE, DARR & CO.. Ate RRATCUUPFE, Dank & Co., AUCTIONEERS. OF FIVE NICE BRICK HOUSES SITUA'FD. AT. THE CORNER OF NN AND ELM SPREEIS, IN LF DROIT TRUSTFES SAL oF a CHANCERY SALE K, IN THE DI decree deney of the New York club. makes ment means that he cannot accept the presi- | ably more. These are distributed literally all the over the earth’s surface, there being no con- | seene. | Parents are fearful that o ‘There was an bour yet to wait, but the crowd Movements in various parts of the body have ad di | also been noticed at irregular intervals. The was patient and found diversion in the shifting | sis re fetal th ‘othe Presently two women appeared with the silk | Of the boy will relapse into a sleep banner of the shawnee County Alliance, bear- | {0m which he will never awaken. Amoi ing the inscription government of the peo- | M#nY of the callers at the house was Rev. piss oF, the. people aid by the people. A. | D. Huedsinpiller, who hed the funeral coin.” ‘This elicited a burst of applause. | Sermon. several churches prayer was There were many notables of both parties | ered thas the boy might be restored. present, but thes attracted no attention. The hail was packed and bundreds were compelled 4 to stand without the doors or interest (hem-| Hog products reached the highest point for selves in the oitices and departmenis below un- | ten years—819.10a barrel—yesterday in tl the ceremony was ove tained SAT Jack Ashton’s Funeral. ‘The funeral services over the remains of Sed oe vee ae ane nk Paik, ea Jack Ashton, the pugilist, took place yesterday at $19.07}¢ The big dealers were not Pa at St. Agnes’ Church, New York. There were | Pit, so the trading was not very sctive, and the way clear for C. H. Byrne, the president of the | siderable spot on the globe where man has not Sis ae of the New Yorks if | ¢ound afoothold. In Asia,the so-called“‘cradle of > decires. the hamen rac,"thereare now about 800,000,000 People, densely crowded, on an average, about ‘The Naval Rendezvous. every square mile. In Europe Gen. Geo. W. Johnston, president Hampton pi le ‘820,000,000 Roads Naval Rendezvous Association, and «| the square large delegation of prominent citizens loft last | but everywhere dense and in many for Weak re base tion | Over popula in Africa there are ap- for the naval review to be held at Norfolk in| forty, South and A a a ember pele ‘The Portsmouth board | over broad areas. On the islands, large and trade and organisationsin Norfolk and Barke- | small. there are probably 10,000,000 meee. The ley have adopted resolutions calling upon Con>! extremes of tke blacks the whites are as failng upon the Vira delegation fo vote for Setinto brows, Fellow end Suvey tn stor, OT the same. One of Heatran ofthe fora | the, entire race $0,000 are well ltied— “be a+ sham battle between vemels they wear garments of some kind that the old Merrimac and Monitor, which Will cover. ‘nakednesson: 230,000,000 habitually aka pisce ueor tar ‘spot where the original | go naked and peace ieee remaining s & 18 POSTPONFD ON AC. ir ALE ge roaTmonnn ox Ac; | MOMMBETr nove and place. | 491-10 jashinvton. D. C. DOWLING & SONS. Auct , 612 Est. ow. AT rd ee sae of tom 4 ~~ TemoRRew. yore Will be sold at the pound, eur > And New \ork ore on WI DNES ARJAN PVENTH. 180, ONE CLO P. TAUSTERS SALP 0 PPOVED PRY rt sh era, foliewtne ta of Sanbimeton, ism at THEE tel proverty attra. pig for the «a forty (40) tert na le eof ne dee O'CLOCK P.M ON THE RAMP DAY By vi-tue of tho same decree were of the samme dm in ike manner, °n frout « vd FAFTER. AT QUARTER OF Pova me eerIN CONSTOTR NAS ase 2 MILLS DEAN, Jed ite Truster SHIN CONSEQUENCE OF THE CONTINEED the chove sles ane postpones mnvil NESDAY. THE EITVENTH Dat OF JAN. ; ak the same | cuss and p aces mii DEAN, Trasten RUSTERS SALF OF SIRABLE IMPROVED PROPERTY. SITUA ON FIETH ThEET VANIA AVENUY ned_of trast dated June 1, nth oie of the Route corn th-nvensrin twenty Sve Thanos west fifty-two oe ec foot ualf (iq) inches to the place of bert By Thi reomerty te tonprowed Ww a nearty ne story ahd basement brick dwelling with w:de's tress a Tbe ven. JAMES F. Hoon, a AF AROVT sare NINTH DAY OF nr and piace, Hood, cM 7 ay. NTINUED BAD WRATHER : ti) WEDNESDAL, ARY, ING. at sand JAS. FP. HOOD, i JOrEi HA KEPET TI) Trestors Sl syarer np ‘18 es JANUARY 1x (ALE PAST Per UNCANSON BROS. Aucte ANSON BROS., Auctioneers, Mth and Date. nw 3 REN, STREETS NO 1 AxD ST, WASMIN. 1894 oe ig ae ne a eee koa Eyzlied "with fn teu dave from hay ot DWELLING, No. $48 Po of a deod ot trust 108 ot seq, Co weed is s ade jeter BESO LTRRIN | teem

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